Guest Blogged by John Gideon of VotersUnite.org and VoteTrustUSA.Org
Sequoia Voting has been in a media blitz lately. Today it is a media release announcing a demonstration of their full-screen Advantage DRE in New York. Unfortunately they are still not telling the truth about their accessibility features which actually force anyone who uses them to vote as if they were blind which actually makes voting much more difficult or impossible for voters who have mobility or cognitive disabilities. / Berkeley Co. West Virginia has already identified that they don't have enough DREs to put in their polling places but it is going to cost them $480,000 to purchase enough and they can't afford them if they had gone with optical-scan they would only need to buy more pencils / ES&S has accepted blame for all of their problems in the Arkansas primary election....
NAtional: Cast Out: Media Briefing on New Voter Suppression Strategies in the 2006 Elections LINK
AR: Legislators slam firm, adopt election report LINK
AR: Proposal: State would fund election coordinators in counties LINK
CA: Humboldt County - Election office gets early look at likely vote system solution LINK
CA: San Diego County - Election Nullification Rejected! LINK
FL: Palm Beach County - Voters assured of count remedy LINK
FL: Sarasota County - Elections officials ordered into voting machine case LINK
MO: Boone County - Electronic voting machines fail to win over county clerk LINK
NY: Sequoia Voting Systems Demonstrates Accessible Voting Machine LINK
NY: Helping the disabled voter Select polling places to have new machines to help the blind, deaf and other cast private and independent votes LINK
OH: For the Sake of Our Democratic Heritage, Ohio's 2004 Presidential Voting Records Must Be Preserved LINK
OH: Lake County - County to sell old voting equipment LINK
OH: Mahoning County - Officials' dispute leaves bills unpaid LINK
PA: Northampton County - Official: Voting machines set to go. Lawsuit filed to stop use of machines without any paper backup. LINKNext Page 1 | 2
(Note: You can view every article as one long page if you sign up as an Advocate Member, or higher).